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I have two double set schuetzen actions sitting in my action cabinet, and have never liked double sets enough to build anything on them. I've built 4 standard trigger high walls for myself and my wife and son while I've owned these actions, and passed them up every time for the standard. However, they are not for sale, keep thinking I might change my mind someday. I have two double set stevens, a double set ballard, and several single set winchesters. The ballard is the only one I use set, I use the others as standard triggers, ignoring the set triggers. To each, their own preference, I guess. My first preference in triggers is my anschutz airgun, and my anschutz .22. Around 2 oz and zero perceptible movement for a standard trigger. Next favorite is my rolling block, with about 8 oz and standard trigger. Essentially no perceptible movement before breaking, and it breaks clean and completely. The rifle that has the reputation for a bad trigger has the best of my rifles. One of my problems with a double set is I can't remember which trigger does what. I've shot at least a couple of thousand rounds through my ballard double set, and I can't tell you sitting here typing which trigger fires it, and which sets. I have to trial and error it at the bench every session. I just got a ballard action and a target grade barrel that meets my approval when I slug it, so might make a standard trigger ballard up to replace the double set. On your question on the triggers being drop in: They are not. Takes some knowledge and tuning to make them work. Probably will work with only hand tools as long as you get well made parts, but will require hand work and skill to get them balanced and working right. I've had some real head scratching sessions trying to mix and match high wall parts and get them to play well together. The double sets are even harder, have to tune the springs to the right forces, after you get the parts to work together. dave
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